Veolia LVP sorting plant in Dresden destroyed by fire

Source: https://www.euwid-recycling.de/news/wirtschaft/lvp-sortieranlage-von-veolia-in-dresden-durch-brand-zerstoert-100823/

Author: Stephen Lang

A major fire today completely destroyed the sorting plant for lightweight packaging from the dual system in Dresden. As the disposal company Veolia reported on request, the fire broke out shortly after midnight for an unknown reason. The building is in danger of collapsing and the damage to property cannot yet be estimated. The Dresden fire brigade is on duty with around 100 people. There were several vehicles and machines in the hall. Within a very short time, the flames broke through the roof of the hall. "Several explosions could also be heard," said the fire department. The main goal of the emergency services is to prevent the spread to neighboring buildings.

Read More

Microplastics found in human heart tissues, both before and after surgical procedures

Source: https://www.acs.org/pressroom/presspacs/2023/august/microplastics-found-in-human-heart-tissues-before-and-after-surgical-procedures.html

Author: PressPacs

Everywhere scientists look for microplastics, they’ve found them — food, water, air and some parts of the human body. But examinations of our innermost organs that aren’t directly exposed to the environment are still limited. Now, in a pilot study of people who underwent heart surgery, researchers in ACS’ Environmental Science & Technology report that they have found microplastics in many heart tissues. They also report evidence suggesting that microplastics were unexpectedly introduced during the procedures.

Read More

How the ‘circular economy’ went from environmentalist dream to marketing buzzword

Source: https://grist.org/accountability/circular-economy-plastics-recycling-reuse-waste-conference-seattle/

Author: Joseph Winters

At a conference in Seattle this summer, Coca-Cola set up shop in an exhibition hall to show off one of its most recent sustainability initiatives. A six-foot-tall interactive jukebox invited passersby to listen to “recycled records” — seven audio tracks that, according to Coca-Cola, represent the world’s first album made with recordings of the plastic recycling process. The project, produced for Coca-Cola by the DJs Mark Ronson and Madlib, was meant to celebrate Coke’s decision to move from green to clear plastic bottles for three of its brands: Sprite, Fresca, and Seagram’s. Because clear plastic bottles are easier to recycle than green ones, Coca-Cola said they would advance a “closed-loop bottle-to-bottle economy” that uses materials more efficiently and creates less waste.

Read More

Markets sting recycling revenue for WM, others

Source: https://resource-recycling.com/recycling/2023/08/07/markets-sting-recycling-revenue-for-wm-others/

Author: Jared Paben

Fiber prices are slowly recovering from the rock-bottom values of late last year and early this year, but scrap plastic prices have fallen dramatically in recent months, taking a toll on the largest haulers’ recycling businesses.  For Waste Management (WM), strained recycled plastic markets have forced executives to revise downward their commodity pricing forecasts for the rest of the year.  

Read More

EPA’s hazardous waste site inspections and plastic pollution efforts falling short, agency report says

Source: https://www.wastedive.com/news/epa-hazardous-waste-plastic-pollution-report/690213/

Author: Megan Quinn

Some of the U.S. EPA’s regulatory programs meant to reduce pollution from hazardous waste sites and prevent trash in waterways are falling short, according to a report from the agency’s Office of Inspector General. The independent office within the EPA makes recommendations for agency improvements and releases a progress report every two years. This year’s report calls for the EPA to work more closely with municipalities to prevent plastic pollution in waterways. It also calls on the EPA to better prioritize inspections of hazardous waste treatment, storage and disposal facilities (TSDFs), saying infrequently performing inspections increases the risk of pollution and health issues.

Read More

More illegal waste imports discovered in Poland

Source: https://www.euwid-recycling.de/news/international/weitere-illegale-abfallimporte-in-polen-entdeckt-080823/

Author: Tom Wilfer

Waste illegally imported from abroad has once again been discovered in Poland. According to the authorities, it is said to be large amounts of shredded plastic waste. Waste imported contrary to legal requirements was discovered at the beginning of last week in the district of Nysa, not far from the border with the Czech Republic, according to the Environmental Protection Inspectorate of the Opole District. Further inspections were carried out in the region and the public prosecutor's office was informed of possible criminal offenses. However, the authority initially did not provide any information on the specific quantity or origin.

Read More

New Mexico plastics fire that released hazardous pollutants could smolder for days

Source: https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/new-mexico-plastics-fire-released-hazardous-pollutants-rcna98567

Author: Aria Bendix

Firefighters in Albuquerque, New Mexico, have contained a gigantic plastics fire that prompted a health alert about hazardous air pollution. But authorities say the debris could still smolder for days. Responders were dispatched on Sunday afternoon to a facility that manufactures and recycles plastic pipes. By then, flames had ignited a storage yard filled with at least an acre of material — old and new pipes, semi-trailers and ground-up material ready to be recycled. A thick cloud of black smoke quickly filled the sky, the result of burning high-density polyethylene, authorities said.

Read More

His Recycling Symbol Is Everywhere. The E.P.A. Says It Shouldn’t Be.

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/07/climate/chasing-arrows-recycling-symbol-epa.html

Author: Chang Che

Gary Anderson was a 23-year-old architecture student at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles in 1970, when he entered a design contest sponsored by a box manufacturer for a logo to promote the recycling of paper. He won, spawning a symbol that became international shorthand for repurposing waste materials. His design: three folded-over arrow strips, chasing each other in an endless triangle.

Read More

Comments on plastics strategy urge source reduction, EPR

Source: https://resource-recycling.com/recycling/2023/08/07/comments-on-plastics-strategy-urge-source-reduction-epr/

Author: Marissa Heffernan

The U.S. EPA asked for input on its draft National Strategy to Prevent Plastic Pollution, and recycling industry stakeholders have answered.  Many of the nearly 92,000 comments on the draft strategy called for federal deposit return systems and extended producer responsibility (EPR) programs. Industry voices also pushed for a greater focus on marine pollution and for the EPA to enforce plastic reduction targets.

Read More

Nessel joins coalition calling for Biden admin. to do more to combat plastic pollution

Source: https://michiganadvance.com/2023/08/04/nessel-joins-coalition-calling-for-biden-admin-to-do-more-to-combat-plastic-pollution/

Author: Kyle Davidson

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel on Thursday announced she was joining a coalition with 13 other attorneys general urging the Biden administration to bolster its strategy to combat plastic pollution.  In the letter, Nessel and attorneys general from California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania and Vermont called on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to implement a broader and more robust plan to improve plastic waste management, and to reduce the production of plastic materials and decrease reliance on them.

Read More

Why “Compostable” Plastic Is Actually Trash

Source: https://environmentaldefence.ca/2023/08/04/why-compostable-plastic-is-actually-trash/

Author: Karen Wirsig

There’s a disturbing push for so-called “compostable” plastic to replace single-use plastic items banned by the federal government. That’s a terrible idea and here’s why: “Compostable” plastic isn’t all that compostable. You can make it from oil and gas, or things like corn or sugar cane, but it’s all plastic when it ends up in the environment.

Read More

EPA’s National Plastics Plan Flouts Sea Pollution, Chemical Use

Source: https://news.bloomberglaw.com/health-law-and-business/epas-national-plastics-plan-flouts-sea-pollution-chemical-use

Author: Christine Zhu

A national plastics strategy by the Biden administration has drawn concern over its scope and consistency with existing laws, according to comments on the proposal that closed earlier this week. The Environmental Protection Agency’s draft national strategy to prevent plastic pollution aims to reduce use and build a circular economy—a system where materials are recycled or recovered instead of thrown away. Released in May, the EPA outlined three objectives for the strategy: reducing pollution during plastic production, improving post-use materials management, and removing trash from the environment.

Read More

Takin’ out the trash: How do transnational waste traffickers operate?

Source: https://news.mongabay.com/2023/08/takin-out-the-trash-how-do-transnational-waste-traffickers-operate/

Author: Guia Baggi, Laura Carrer, Rahma Behi, Virginia Kirst

In 2020, 282 containers full of mixed waste bales sailed from Salerno, Italy, to Sousse, Tunisia, in four shipments. Italian customs did not raise any flags. Customs classified them as CA, or automated control (controllo automatizzato in the local language), simply meaning no control. Back then, the COVID-19 pandemic was kicking, and officials relaxed scrutiny of goods between countries. But even outside global emergencies, only a tiny portion of outbound containers undergo some control. In Italy, it’s roughly 2%.

Read More

Group calls for EPA to include textiles in efforts to address plastic waste

Source: https://www.recyclingtoday.com/news/group-calls-for-epa-to-include-textiles-in-plastic-waste-effort/

Author: Deanna Toto

American Circular Textiles (ACT), a New York City-based coalition of organizations working to drive circularity in the U.S. fashion sector, submitted a letter to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) July 31, urging the agency to include textiles in its efforts to prevent plastic pollution. The letter, submitted by Rachel Kibbe, executive director of ACT, during the comment period for EPA’s draft National Strategy to Prevent Plastic Pollution, outlines the pressing challenges of textile waste and proposes solutions to combat the environmental and social impacts caused by the industry.

Read More

ISRI responds to EPA plastic pollution reduction strategy

Source: https://www.recyclingproductnews.com/article/40603/isri-responds-to-epa-plastic-pollution-reduction-strategy

Author: Recycling Product News Staff

The Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI) has submitted comments in response to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) request for public comment on its Draft National Strategy to Prevent Plastic Pollution. "Plastics are an extremely diverse, resourceful group of materials used in our daily lives," says ISRI President Robin Wiener. "Given the complexity of the recycling system and plastics in particular, there simply is no one single answer to the challenges facing plastics materials management in the United States. We applaud EPA for a proposed strategy that recognizes there are many solutions that, taken together, can make a significant difference in keeping plastic out of the environment and instead, circulate these valuable material resources into the manufacturing supply chain. We welcome the opportunity to further collaborate with the Agency and others to advance this proposed strategy."

Read More